Your search Roman cemetery of St. Matthias gave 3406 results.
Dedication from Simitthus mentioning the restoration of a monument and a vow fulfilled to Cautes and Cautopates during the reign of Caracalla and Julia Maesa.
A certain Secundinus, steward of the emperor, dedicated this altar to Mithras in Noricum, today Austria.
This oolite base, dedicated to the invincible Mithras, was found in the baths of the Villa de Caerleon, Walles.
The floor mosaic of the Mithraeum of the Seven Spheres, which gives its name to the temple, depicts a dagger.
Second Mithraic monument dedicated by the Kastos family, found not far from the Arco di S. Lazzaro, in Rome.
The altar that now stands in Split was dedicated to Invincible Mithras for the health of a dear friend.
The inscription explains the transmission of the fourth Mithraic degree through the Paters of the Mitraeum of San Silvestro.
This marble gives some details of the reconstruction of the Virunum Mithraeum.
Antonius Valentinus, centurio, made this plaque for the salut des empereurs Septimus Severus and Marcus Aurelius.
This altar, now lost, mentions that the Pater Patrum passed on the attributes of the sacred Corax to his son.
The name of the Mithraeum of the Seven Gates refers to the doors depicted in the mosaic that decorates the floor, symbolising the seven planets through which the souls of the initiates have to pass.
The Mitreo dei Marmi Colorati takes its name after the discovery of a black-and-white mosaic of Pan fighting with Eros.
This sandstone altar from the Mithraeum of Vindobala (modern Rudchester) preserves a dedication to the Invincible Mithras by P. Aelius Titullus, prefect of a cohort.
The inscription on the decorated altar No. 839 from the Mithraeum at Vindobala (modern Rudchester), recording a gift to the Deity by L. Sentius Castus, a soldier of the Sixth Legion.
A decorated altar from the Mithraeum at Vindobala (modern Rudchester), with the letters DEO crowned with vittae on the shaft, surrounded by palm-branches, a representation of Mithras' rock-birth on the capital, and on the front of the die a naked figure grasping a bull's horns…
A marble statuette found at Augusta Emerita (modern Mérida) in 1902, representing a seated deity whose head, arms and feet are lost, tentatively identified as Jupiter-Serapis.
Stein am Rhein occupied a strategic position near the western limits of the Danubian frontier system.
Rohr im Kremstal belongs to the Alpine hinterland associated with Roman Noricum.
Kadine-Most lies within the central Balkan region historically connected with Roman Moesia.